
Challenges
Consistent coverage and high fidelity were required from compact, full-range speakers with minimal visual impact on church architecture and iconography. Precise pattern control and extended low-frequency control were also essential to keep sound off hard, reverberant surfaces lacking acoustic treatment.
Solution
“Previous Saint Sabina Church sound systems using line array and column speakers failed to provide clear, uniform coverage throughout the sanctuary,” explains ASC systems consultant Brent Handy. “Rather than using a long 55-foot throw to the back of the church, our approach was to get high-fidelity, point-source speakers as close to the congregation as possible to provide the same tone and sonic character to everyone.”
“Fulcrum had just launched their cardioid CCX product family, applying their patented Passive Cardioid Technology™ to their best-selling line of compact coaxial installation loudspeakers,” states Handy. “The timing couldn’t have worked out better for us as this truss-speaker design approach demanded cardioid patterns to minimize LF blowback and work within the architecture rather than fight against it.”
“When Father Jeff Stephan uttered his first hello with the new system, parishioners had never heard such volume and clarity in their church,” remarks Handy. “Saint Sabina’s diverse musical styles include traditional keyboard with choir, contemporary instrumentation with praise singers, and Hispanic Ministry Masses with four guitars, two keyboards and drums playing upbeat Mexican arrangements. Church members love the musicality of their new Fulcrum system which made their older systems sound like AM radios. And as far as Father Jeff’s homilies, well, he had them at hello.”